Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2011
…in all future times in this city, as in all other cities, holdings, and territories belonging to the Roman Church, all Jews should live solely in one and the same location, or if that is not possible, in two or three or as many as are necessary, which are to be contiguous and separated completely from the dwellings of Christians. These places are to be designated by us in our city and by our magistrates in the other cities, holdings, and territories. And they should have one entry alone, and so too one exit.
Pope Paul IV, Cum Nimis Absurdum (1555)The word “ghetto” can be traced to Venice in what historians refer to as the “Early Modern Age” (the early sixteenth century); there is no documentary evidence of it before that time, although modern scholarship applies it retrospectively to Jewish neighborhoods in earlier centuries. In medieval Christian Europe, Jews tended to live in close proximity to one another, chiefly because of their religious and social needs (easy access to the synagogue and other vital community institutions). Sometimes this geographic concentration was the result of local rulers' invitations to Jews to settle in their cities, including the allocation of a district or street in which they could live. Sometimes these places were surrounded by a wall to protect the Jews.
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